[5][6] Since its founding in 2018, the San Isidro Movement has held a variety of protests including those by performative artist Otero Alcántara who performed a striptease to draw attention to the lack of privacy when accessing the internet, created the Museum of Dissidence in Cuba, as well as a protest to criticize the removal of a bust of communist martyr Julio Antonio Mella to make room for a luxury hotel.
[14] A protest outside the Cuban Culture Ministry in Havana the next day attracted hundreds, including Tania Bruguera, Jorge Perugorría and Fernando Pérez, and culminated in a meeting between the deputy culture minister, Fernando Rojas, with members of the group, in order to reach agreements and dialogues regarding freedom of expression and other issues related to democracy and human rights in the island.
[11] In 2020 the rap song Patria y Vida (English: Fatherland and Life) by Descemer Bueno, Gente De Zona, Maykel Osorbo, El Funky and Yotuel included lyrics that paid tribute to the San Isidro Movement.
It also urged the Cuban State to comply with its commitments and obligations in relation to the granting of essential guarantees, the fulfillment of human rights and due process in judicial matters.
[21] Belgian socialist MP Marie Arena, the chair of the European Parliament's Subcommittee on Human Rights has voiced support for the group,[22] as did US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who tweeted that the United States "urged the Cuban regime to cease harassment of San Isidro Movement protesters and to release musician Denis Solís, who was unjustly sentenced to eight months in prison.
[25] On Twitter, Cuba's president and Communist Party first secretary Miguel Díaz-Canel called MSI an "imperial show to destroy our identity and subjugate us again".